Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Meeting Wednesday at City Hall on Expansion Policy for City of Milwaukee Charters « Larry Miller's Blog: Educate All Students!

Meeting Wednesday at City Hall on Expansion Policy for City of Milwaukee Charters « Larry Miller's Blog: Educate All Students!:


Meeting Wednesday at City Hall on Expansion Policy for City of Milwaukee Charters

The City of Milwaukee Charter School Review Committee appears to be voting Wednesday, June 27th, at 5 PM in City Hall Room 301-B, on new criteria for allowing new schools to come aboard under city charters granted to other schools that would act as “umbrella organizations.”
Milwaukee citizens  should be aware of  the process for expanding charters and what are called “charter management organizations” (being called “umbrella organizations) for this new school system under the management of the Milwaukee Common Council.
Notice the performance rating scale that follows:
City of Milwaukee:
Educational Performance Rating Scale for Charter Schools
High Performing/Exemplary 100%–85%
Promising/Good 84%–70%
Problematic/Struggling 69%–55%
Poor/Failing 54% or less
A new school can be chartered under the umbrella of a school that’s only attained a 70%.  That’s at the very bottom of the “good” range and only one point above the “problematic/struggling” range.
Attached are 2 documents related to the meeting:
City Charters1
City Charters2


National Resolution on High-Stakes Testing

This resolution is modeled on the resolution passed by more than 360 Texas school boards as of April 23, 2012. It was written by Advancement ProjectAsian American Legal Defense and Education FundFairTestForum for Education and DemocracyMecklenburgACTSDeborah MeierNAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc.National Education AssociationNew York Performance Standards Consortium; Tracy Novick; Parents Across AmericaParents United for Responsible Education – ChicagoDiane RavitchRace to NowhereTime Out From Testing; and United Church of Christ Justice and Witness Ministries.
We encourage organizations and individuals to publicly endorse it (see below). Organizations should modify it as needed for their local circumstances while also endorsing this national version.
WHEREAS, our nation’s future well-being relies on a high-quality public education system that prepares all students for college, careers, citizenship and lifelong learning, and strengthens the nation’s social and economic well-being; and
WHEREAS, our nation’s school systems have been spending growing amounts of time, money and energy on high-stakes standardized testing, in which student performance on standardized tests is used to make major decisions affecting individual students, educators and schools; and
WHEREAS, the over-reliance on high-stakes standardized testing in state and federal accountability systems is undermining educational quality and equity in U.S. public schools by hampering educators’ efforts to focus on the broad range of learning experiences that promote the innovation, creativity, problem solving, collaboration, communication, critical thinking and deep subject-matter knowledge that will allow students to thrive in a democracy and an increasingly global society and economy; and
WHEREAS, it is widely recognized that standardized testing is an inadequate and often unreliable measure of both student learning and educator effectiveness; and
WHEREAS, the over-emphasis on standardized testing has caused considerable collateral damage in too many schools, including narrowing the curriculum, teaching to the test, reducing love of learning, pushing students out of school, driving excellent teachers out of the profession, and undermining school climate; and
WHEREAS, high-stakes standardized testing has negative effects for students from all backgrounds, and especially for low-income students, English language learners, children of color, and those with disabilities; and
WHEREAS, the culture and structure of the systems in which students learn must change in order to foster engaging school experiences that promote joy in learning, depth of thought and breadth of knowledge for students; therefore be it
RESOLVED, that [your organization name] calls on the governor, state legislature and state education boards and administrators to reexamine public school accountability systems in this state, and to develop a system based on multiple forms of assessment which does not require extensive standardized testing, more accurately reflects the broad range of student learning, and is used to support students and improve schools; and
RESOLVED, that [your organization name] calls on the U.S. Congress and Administration to overhaul the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, currently known as the “No Child Left Behind Act,” reduce the testing mandates, promote multiple forms of evidence of student learning and school quality in accountability, and not mandate any fixed role for the use of student test scores in evaluating educators.